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约翰·肯尼迪《我们选择登月》英语演讲稿
n this 1962 speech given at Rice University in
Houston,
Texas,
President
John
F.
Kennedyreaffirmed
America's
commitment to landing a man on the moon
before the end of the
President
spoke
in
philosophical
terms
about
the
need
to solve the mysteries
of spaceand also defended the enormous
expense of the space program.
President
pitzer
Mr.
Vice
President,
Governor,
Congressman
Thomas, Senator
Wiley, andCongressman Miller, Mr. Webb, Mr.
Bell,
scientists,
distinguished
guests,
and
ladies
andgentlemen:
I
appreciate your president having made me an
honorary
visiting
professor,
and
I
will
assureyou
that
my
first
lecture
will be very brief.
I
am delighted to be here and I'm particularly
delighted
to be here on this occasion.
We meet at a college noted for
knowledge, in a city noted
for
progress,
in
a
state
noted
forstrength,
and
we
stand
in
need
of all three, for we
meet in an hour of change and challenge,
ina decade of hope and fear, in an age
of both knowledge and
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ignorance.
The
greater
ourknowledge
increases,
the
greater
our
ignorance unfolds.
Despite
the
striking
fact
that
most
of
the
scientists
that
the world has ever
known are alive andworking today, despite
the
fact
that
this
Nation's
own
scientific
manpower
is
doubling
every
12years in a rate of growth more than three times
that
of our population as a whole,
despitethat, the vast stretches
of the
unknown and the unanswered and the unfinished
still
faroutstrip our collective
comprehension.
No man can fully
grasp how far and how fast we have come,
but condense, if you will, the50,000
years of man's recorded
history
in
a
time
span
of
but
a
half-century.
Stated
in
theseterms,
we
know
very
little
about
the
first
40
years,
except
at the end of them advanced manhad
learned to use the skins of
animals
to
cover
them.
Then
about
10
years
ago,
under
thisstandard, man emerged from his
caves to construct other
kinds of
shelter. Only five years agoman learned to write
and
use
a
cart
with
wheels.
Christianity
began
less
than
two
years
printing press came
this year, and then less than two
months ago, during this whole 50-year
span of human history,
the
steam
engine
provided
a
new
source
of
power.
Newtonexplored
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the
meaning
of
gravity.
Last
month
electric
lights
and
telephones
and
automobilesand
airplanes
became
available.
Only
last week did we
develop penicillin and television andnuclear
power,
and
now
if
America's
new
spacecraft
succeeds
in
reaching
Venus,
we
will
haveliterally
reached
the
stars
before
midnight
tonight.
This is a breathtaking pace, and
such a pace cannot help
but
create
new
ills
as
it
dispels
old,new
ignorance,
new
problems,
new
dangers.
Surely
the
opening
vistas
of
space
promise highcosts and hardships, as
well as high reward.
So it
is
not
surprising
that
some
would have
us
stay
where
we
are
a
little
longer
to
rest,
to
this
city
of
Houston,
this
state of Texas,
this country
of the United
States was
not
built bythose who waited
and rested and wished to look behind
them.
This
country
was
conquered
bythose
who
moved
forward
--and
so will space.
William Bradford, speaking in 1630 of the founding
of the
Plymouth Bay Colony, said that
allgreat and honorable actions
are
accompanied
with
great
difficulties,
and
both
must
beenterprised and overcome with
answerable courage.
If
this
capsule
history
of
our
progress
teaches
us
anything,
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it is that man, in his quest
forknowledge and progress, is
determined and cannot be deterred. The
exploration of space
willgo ahead,
whether we join in it or not, and it is one of
the great adventures of all time, and
nonation which expects
to be the leader
of other nations can expect to stay behind in
this race forspace.
Those
who
came
before
us
made
certain
that
this
country
rode
the
first waves of the industrialrevolution, the first
waves
of modern invention, and the
first wave of nuclear power, and
thisgeneration does not intend to
founder in the backwash of
the coming
age of space. We mean tobe a part of it--we mean
to
lead it. For the eyes of the world
now look into space, to the
moonand
to the
planets
beyond,
and we
have
vowed
that
we
shall
not
see
it
governed
by
a
hostileflag
of
conquest,
but
by
a
banner
of
freedom and
peace. We
have
vowed
that
we
shall not
seespace
filled
with weapons of mass destruction, but with
instruments
of knowledge
andunderstanding.
Yet the vows of
this Nation can only be fulfilled if we in
this Nation are first, and, therefore,
weintend to be first.
In
short,
our
leadership
in
science
and
industry,
our
hopes
for
peace
andsecurity, our obligations to ourselves as well
as
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others,
all
require
us
to
make
this
effort,
tosolve
these
mysteries,
to
solve
them
for
the
good
of
all
men,
and
to
become
the
world'sleading space-faring nation.
We set sail
on this
new
sea
because there
is
new
knowledge
to
be
gained,
and
new
rights
to
bewon,
and
they
must
be
won
and
used
for
the
progress
of
all
people.
For
space
science,
likenuclear science
and all technology, has no conscience of
its own.
Whether it
will
become aforce
for
good
or ill
depends
on man, and only if the United
States occupies a position of
pre-
eminence
can
we
help
decide
whether
this
new
ocean
will
be
a sea of peace or a new
terrifyingtheater of war. I do not say
that
we
should
or
will
go
unprotected
against
the
hostile
misuse
ofspace
any
more
than
we
go
unprotected
against
the
hostile
use
of
land or sea, but I do saythat space can be
explored and
mastered without feeding
the fires of war, without repeating
themistakes
that
man
has
made
in
extending
his
writ
around
this
globe of ours.
There is
no strife, no prejudice, no national conflict in
outer space
as yet. Its
hazards arehostile
to us all.
Its
conquest
deserves
the
best
of
all
mankind,
and
its
opportunity
forpeaceful
cooperation many never come again. But why, some
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